Multimodal Telerehabilitation in Post COVID-19 Condition Recovery: A Series of 12 Cases
Beatriz Carpallo-Porcar, Esther del Corral Beamonte, Carolina Jiménez-Sánchez, Paula Córdova-Alegre, Natalia Brandín-de la Cruz, Sandra Calvo

TL;DR
This study shows that home-based telerehabilitation can improve fatigue and physical strength in patients recovering from long-term effects of COVID-19.
Contribution
The study introduces a 12-week multimodal telerehabilitation program and suggests asynchronous approaches may be effective for post-COVID-19 recovery.
Findings
Significant improvements in fatigue, aerobic capacity, and limb and respiratory strength were observed.
No improvement was found in dyspnea scores, which did not correlate with respiratory strength.
A post-intervention correlation emerged between aerobic capacity and perceived fatigue, suggesting asynchronous telerehabilitation could be viable.
Abstract
Background: Post COVID-19 Condition is a recently recognized syndrome characterized by the persistence of various symptoms, including dyspnea, physical and mental fatigue, and post-exertional malaise. Currently, there is no established treatment or clear consensus on the effectiveness of rehabilitation, and given that patients could benefit from home-based rehabilitation, telerehabilitation, defined as remote rehabilitation using telematic systems, may be an option to reach more of the population with persistent COVID-19 symptoms. Therefore, it is necessary to show the efficacy of this telematic approach and the benefits of a multimodal rehabilitation strategy in these patients. Methods: Patients underwent home rehabilitation using a 12-week synchronous telerehabilitation system. The intervention included therapeutic education and physical and respiratory rehabilitation. The following…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLong-Term Effects of COVID-19 · COVID-19 and Mental Health · Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Research
